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Doris Anderson (November 14, 1897 – June 1971) was a prolific American screenwriter active during 1920s through the 1950s.
Doris Hilda Anderson, CC OOnt (November 10, 1921 – March 2, 2007) was a Canadian author, journalist and women's rights activist. She is best known as the editor of the women's magazine Chatelaine , mixing traditional content (recipes, décor) with thorny social issues of the day (violence against women, pay equality, abortion, race, poverty ...
Writer: King of Gamblers. Doris Anderson was born on 14 November 1897 in Chico, California, USA. Doris was a writer, known for King of Gamblers (1937), True to the Navy (1930) and Love Birds (1934).
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- Chico, California, USA
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- Washington, District of Columbia, USA
Jan 12, 2014 · Doris Anderson, the sharp-witted journalist and outspoken feminist who died in 2007, has been brought back to life on an unlikely stage by a group of Canadian theatre students.
Nov 2, 2012 · Doris Anderson, the mother of us all. When my colleague and Chatelaine 's inspiring former editor passed away in March at age 85, the nation lost an intrepid force – the best friend women...
In an era of post-feminist posturings, of “bad girl,” blame-the-date-rape-victim journalists, and of tell-all “toxic parent” biographies, Doris Anderson’s restrained, dignified, and unabashedly feminist autobiography, Rebel Daughter, is a breath of fresh air.
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May 17, 2002 · Doris Anderson. During her twenty years as the editor of Chatelaine magazine, Doris Anderson blazed a trail for Canadian women. Long before Betty Friedan's The Feminine Mystique was published, Anderson was writing about abortion, child care, custody arrangements, and pay equity.